Happy Easter

Easter was always a special day in our lives when my sons were young and we were a family of five.  The boys were dressed alike, of course I had a new hat with matching dress or visa versa and we all went to church and shared Easter Egg hunts and Pot Luck brunches at one of our houses.  It was a wonderful of great friends, good food and happy children chasing around the yards in a frenzy looking for the best egg or surprise, as we hid trucks and etc.

As the years passed and the boys grew and we moved away from that community, Easter has become quieter.  I no longer have that great group of friends to say to “Come on over and bring the kids”, so it looks differently these days.  My youngest son came to dinner, so I had a lovely morning cooking.

Paul Hollywood’s Chocolate Almond Cake is wonderful with a cherry infusion and chocolate ganache frosting.  After a taste we sent it next door to my neighbor having a bigger get together.  Dinner was simple with a butterflied, rolled and stuffed leg of lamb.  Using Giada De Laurentils recipe, it was a tad dry, so would add a stock bath in the pan next time.  The Arugula Salad sitting on Ricotta was tasty, but I would use a lot less dressing than she called for in her recipe.  The Artichoke Risotto was perfection.

IMG_5002IMG_5006IMG_5008IMG_5009

Happy Easter

Thanksgiving

IMG_8669

Growing up in a rural farming community, we all got together for Thanksgiving and for Christmas.  Family, extended family, aunts, uncles, cousins and neighbors all brought their special food to share on these two very family oriented days.  We gave thanks that we had health, not particularly wealth; but we all had the joy of spending time together sharing stories, food and joy.  As I grew older, going to college, losing my father, watching my own mother deteriorate with bi-polar disorder I noticed the get-togethers were den-dolling. We just didn’t get together anymore.  Grandparents were getting older, aunts and uncles did not want to take on the responsibility, so what happened I am not sure.  I moved further away to continue my studies and had dinner with a cousin while in LA, but there was no extended family invited anymore.  They were either less, or not close.  I often wonder what happened to them all, as I have never kept in touch.

As I married, my late husband was close to his family, so they became my family and as we grew our family we all got together.  We tried to include my own mother, but it was difficult as she suffered from bi-polarism and no longer related to the outside world.  My brother eventually married and they added to our circle of holiday celebration.   Once again time passed, we added friends to our celebrations and it felt like home to me.

At forty I was widowed, and it seemed my extended family went away.  I kept trying to have the holidays, but the joy was no longer there for me for many years.  A few close friends stayed, but living far away we did not get together for holidays.  Often it would be just my boys and me for the celebration and as they grew older and moved on in their lives, coming home for the holidays was no longer important to them.  I watch families get together on the holidays on Facebook and am sad that mine are no longer with me on those two days a year.  We talk and I hear about their parities or where they went, but somehow it makes me sad that I am no longer a real part of it all.

I used to look forward to the happy days together.  This year I cooked for two days, for my one son and my husband and we sat down and were done in fifteen minutes.  What do you do to make the holidays a celebration as you get older?  Moving to another small city I seem to have lost the friends I had that lived a mere ten miles away.  Guess life changes and you either accept the changes or do something to change it.  You can’t do it over and it does no good to complain.  No one listens or they think you are a grump.  I am not complaining, I am just wondering what you do to make it better.  Maybe I need a new community.

Thanksgiving